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M A G A Z I N E
Where Your Passion Goes, 831’s Curiosity Follows Where Your Passion Goes, 831’s Curiosity Follows Jim Morrison once said, “whoever controls the media, controls the mind.” Media’s role is to inform us about current affairs, but also to indulge us with the latest gossip and fashion. It can be politics, money, and even religion that shape our media. That’s fine. But at 831, we’re simply curious. We’re curious about what’s happening, who is behind it, and even what they’re wearing while they’re doing it. Passion and curiosity: it’s simply what inspires us. Nick Galante is literally driven by passion. And this Pebble-Beach-caddieturned-pro-race-car-driver translates that passion into speed around the racetrack. We asked Nick to share his experience with 831 on page 64. Speaking of fast, we were able to slow down freerunner Brian Orosco long enough to hear him tell us how he sees the world as a playground. On page 38, Brian tells us that freerunning – also known as parkour – is primarily about self-expression: moving backward and forward, up, down, and around barriers, and doing it with style. In an ever-changing community, we’re curious about keeping up with what influences our stylish and chic residents. New to this issue is our Street-Style discussion on page 14. Find out what locals are wearing and who are their fashion icons. And on page 54, we sit down with Salinas fashion designer Noel Jean. Her inspiration, she tells 831, is Frida Kahlo. Noel insists that keeping abreast of social and cultural change is what drives her design’s big impact. 831 also explores our locals’ passion for politics. We asked you what issues you would put on a t-shirt and proudly display for all voters to see. It’s all about devotion and the power of slogans on page 42. Can enthusiasm and tranquility go hand-in-hand? On page 82, local professor María Villaseñor discusses Zen and meditation. After finding your center, flip over to page 52, where 831 Magazine reveals one writer’s opinion that the fashion industry is secretly manipulating us into relationships, in Women’s Clothing: A Man’s Perspective. We’re all driven by something. We at 831 have dedicated this issue to acknowledging the verve in our community. We hope the stories and artists featured in the pages that follow cultivate a spirit in our readers to make the Peninsula a curious and passionate place to live.
Mahendra / Lanita Lama Publishers
Operations Karma Lama Creative / Design Ryan lama Fashion Alli Wood Photography Reg Regalado Editor In Chief Ryan Zen Lama Senior Editor Jacqueline Young Junior Editors Lindsey Douros, Blaise Douros Junior Style Editors Samantha Grillo, Quinn To, Michelle Ngoi Contributing Writers Lisa Watson, Ronny Haraldsvik, Lindsey Douros, Michelle Winn, Adrea Peters, Blaise Douros, , Cameron Hunter, Noel Gray, Quinn To, Samantha Grillo, Michelle Ngoi, María Villaseñor Contributing Photographers
Manny Espinoza, Andy Batt, Jose Infante, Odesy Barbu
Advisors lanita bomzan Nathan winn Nick Tomb Lejla Mavris Cameron Hunter Smriti shrestha Graphic Designers Raaz Bomzan, Jeevan Tamang All Contacts life@831mag.com
831 Magazine is solely published by 831Inc 126 Bonifacio Place Suite H&I Monterey CA 93940 1-831-621-9490 1-877-My-831mag 831 accepts no responsibility for the return of unsolicited manuscripts, photographs, artwork, products or other material. All rights reserved. Reproduction in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical without permission is prohibited. No representation is made as to the accuracy hereof and is printed subject to errors and omissions.
Jacqueline Young Jacqueline Young Senior Editor
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Sept. Q ‘10 | 9
BLAISE DOUROS
María Villaseñor
LISA WATSON
Noël Gray
He is a local writer, filmmaker, and composer of classical music. Blaise has lived all over California, venturing briefly to Minnesota to study at St. Olaf College, where he majored in Music Composition. Soon after, he moved to Monterey to work for a studio making documentaries for National Geographic and PBS. He loves history, literature, and humor, especially when combined. In his spare time, he enjoys hiking, slacklining, reading, cooking, wine, video games, or doing any of the above with his lovely wife.
She is a professor of Chicano/aLatino/a Studies in the Division of Humanities and Communication at California State University, Monterey Bay. She is a new practitioner of Zen in the Soto tradition and a reform indigenista Catholic. She lives in Marina and recommends that people love one another and meditate regularly.
A fifth-generation Nor-Cal, she belongs to one of three sets of twins in a large and dynamic family—at times, the source of her writing. UC Davis grad who has enjoyed a diverse career in business, education and writing. Also an adjunct instructor of writing and journalism for CSUMB.
As a fifth generation California native, Gray has sea salt in her veins. She is a lover of laughter, art, poetry, and children. Gray holds a degree in education and has written poetry since the age of 12. She currently resides in Monterey with her two amazing children and writes for 831 Magazine.
Michelle Ngoi Jacqueline Young
Samantha Grillo Sam is a self-proclaimed workaholic, always on the go. She keeps a jam packed schedule and rarely sleeps. She loves running, painting, reading and socializing. Sam is especially elated to have found a job at 831 Magazine where shopping can also be classified and justified as “research”. A recent graduate of Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, she holds a degree in Broadcast Journalism with a minor in Political Science. Sam is happy to be back in the 831 near her crazy family of 7.
Quinn To Fashion enthusiast, shoe connoisseur. A Minnesota native, Quinn graduated from CSU Monterey Bay with a B.A. in Human Communications with a concentration in Journalism and Media Studies. In college, she wrote for the school newspaper and developed her own fashion column. Since then she has written for a Minneapolis based fashion magazine before moving back to the Central Coast. Aside from reading and writing, she enjoys meeting new people and telling her friends what to wear.
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Jacqueline Young loves a good story. She loves to hear one as much as tell one, to read as much as write. She believes that a good story illustrates who the subject is and conveys why the reader should care. And that’s why the Senior Editor for 831 Magazine loves her job; she is the Monterey Peninsula’s bridge between what happens and why it matters. Jacqueline is a fashionable chick with a B.A. in Communications from CSUMB; she wrote and edited for other local publications and production companies before investing her experience in 831. She is passionate about writing, creating change, and stirring things up.
LINDSEY DOUROS An English major from Azusa Pacific University, she often draws inspiration from her meandering explorations of the Monterey peninsula. Perhaps Lindsey’s greatest muse is provided by the quick wit and ready contributions of her husband. She has discovered that life as a young newlywed in a coastal tourist town provides a plethora of writing material.
Michelle Ngoi is an artist, writer, and photographer from Salinas, California. Fashion journalism, photography, clothing, and accessory design are her main areas of interest. Michelle believes 831 Magazine is the perfect fit for her passion and is excited to be a part of the team.
RONNY HARALDSVIK Ronny Haraldsvik holds a BA from the University of San Francisco and has over 20 years of global strategic marketing and industry experience across a range of technology segments. He is currently Vice President of Marketing with a startup company, SpiderCloud Wireless. Haraldsvik has held Vice President positions at Qualcomm Incorporated, Flarion Technologies, and Nortel Networks’ Shasta IP Services unit. He was director of marketing at Bay Networks. And 831 Magazine’s “Techstyle” writer lives in Pacific Grove with his family.
727-731 San Benito Street, Downtown Hollister, California www.blaksage.com 831-636-9100 www.drapoel.com 831-636-5988 Sept. Q ‘10 | 11
Facetime with our Facebook Friends
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Sept. Q ‘10 | 13
Indian Summer
831. Street Style By Quinn To Clockwise from top left
Now that “June Gloom” has passed and the peninsula enters into its “Indian Summer”, locals are strutting strappy sandals, bright florals, bold prints, and V-neck tanks. 831 caught up with a few people who were doing it right. A Salinas native, 17-year-old Mary Rivera wears a floral strapless dress from Wet Seal and leather sandals from Payless. She describes her personal style as hippie-chic, and she looks to herself for inspiration. She loves the fashion-
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able summer swimsuits and summer dresses. She’s most looking forward to wearing her summer jewelry.
styles, and looks to Audrey Hepburn for style inspiration. Her favorite Indian summer trend is the romper.
21-year-old Jenn Wider, from Santa Cruz, wears a black maxi by Choice and a Fly Lizard design ring. Her style staple is a pair of heels but she enjoys being comfortable. Her favorite summer trends are Bandau tops and animal print swimwear. This season, she wants to wear anything with studs and strappy sandals.
Marina local 21-year-old Carolyn Nguyen layers a grey vest with a white tank from Pac Sun. She gets her trendy and cute style from observing others around her. Her favorite summer trend is tunic tanks.
Santa Cruz local 22-year-old Kaity Quesada wears a white, yellow, and blue dress from Abercrombie. She enjoys easygoing feminine
20-year-old Grant Helm, from Seaside, wears a tank top from Pac Sun, and is a selfdescribed comfortable hipster. His favorite summer trends are V-necks and tank tops.
“My camera has the power to grant a wish.” Nigel Barker, Fashion Photographer
I’m usually searching for models. But four years ago, one found me. The Make-A-Wish Foundation® introduced me to a young lady with a life-threatening medical condition. Her wish? To be a supermodel. And she wanted me to be the photographer! Since then, I’ve been hooked on wishes. Whenever the Make-A-Wish Foundation calls, I make time to help. At Amanda’s shoot, we laughed, cried and hugged… it was one of the most emotional days of my life.
“I wish to be a supermodel.” AMANDA, AGE 16
We all have the power to grant a wish. Start your journey SM with Destination Joy at Wish.org
© 2007 Make-A-Wish Foundation of America.
Come on board and contribute your time, talents and resources to make children’s wishes come true.
SHARE THE POWER OF A WISH® © 2007 Make-A-Wish Foundation of America.
Sept. Q ‘10 | 15
feature
On Your M Get S 16 | Sept. Q ‘10
By Lisa Crawford Watson
Sleepy-eyed and silent, hundreds of runners ambled their way through the crowd in the still-gray dawn of April 26, as they positioned themselves near the start line of the 25th annual Big Sur International Marathon. Someone sang the Star-Spangled Banner like a prayer, and doves were released like hope into the sky, the rush of wings softening to a hush that hung on the air just before the gun went off. The heart of every runner lurched and their bodies rocketed forward as if shot across the start line. Daniel Tapia, 23, took off from the start as though it were a sprint, giving it everything he had. Keenly aware that the more seasoned runners would scoff that he had gone out so fast and, perhaps set their watches in a bet as to how soon he would cramp up, hit the wall, and drop out of the race, he worried. Still, kicking off at a 5:30 pace, he felt he had a good strategy if he could do it; take the lead and maintain it all the way across the finish line. And, for most of the race, it worked. He kept that 5:30 pace and a five-minute lead for 22 of the 26.2 miles. With just four miles to go, Tapia began to lose steam. His calf muscles cramped, straining with every footfall. He slipped from a 5:30 to a 5:50 pace. The seasoned runner in second place began to close in on that five-minute lead.
Clothing: Khakis of Carmel, Carmel Plaza Photography: Moss Media, Carmel
And still, Tapia won the race, clocking in at a respectable 2:26. It has been done before. But not normally when the contender has never before run a marathon. Ever.
When Tapia took up running in high school, it actually had nothing to do with running. It wasn’t that he didn’t like the sport; he simply knew nothing about it. What he did know, what he did understand, what psyched him most was soccer. He took up running because of his investment in soccer; to get faster on the field, to pick up the pace and run circles around that ball. What he quickly learned, however, was that he liked to run. Moving along the trails with his North County High School cross country team, he felt light, easy, fluid; his body moving in a kind of natural rhythm. It felt good, it felt right; it felt like he could go on forever. Tapia knew he might not be the fastest on the trail, might be left behind in a sprint, but he had stamina, endurance; and there was a lot to be gained by those who could go the distance. One month after he began training with the team, Tapia started competing. After just a few races, he earned a spot on the varsity cross country team. Upon graduation in 2004, he enrolled at UC Santa Cruz to earn a bachelor’s degree in legal studies en route to law school. He replaced his running with the pursuit of his degree – partly because the university did not have a cross country team, and mostly because he was determined to excel in school. “Once high school was over,” said Tapia, “so was my competitive running. There was no team, no one to run with. Discouraged, I gave it up and focused on school. The only thing that kept me going before was getting ready for soccer season; that and the friends I made on the team. Without either of those, running got relegated to nothing but daily recreation.” Until he decided to win a marathon. Here’s how it happened.
Contd... Page 18
r Mark, Set, Win
First-time local marathoner Daniel Tapia takes home the trophy Sept. Q ‘10 | 17
WHAT SPARKED YOUR RETURN TO COMPETITIVE RUNNING? i was running around the Hartnell College track in Salinas, when i met Coach Chris Zepeda. i told him i was going to take extra classes at Hartnell so i could graduate early from UC Santa Cruz, and i said i wanted to run for him while i did. He took me in, and i started training with him. WHAT HAPPENED TO YOUR RUNNING AFTER YOU GRADUATED FROM COLLEGE? after i graduated from UC Santa Cruz in 2008, i enrolled in Monterey College of Law to pursue my Juris doctorate in criminal law. This time, i didn’t give up my running. But, instead of running to get ready for soccer, instead of running for the team, i started running for myself. only then did i actually fall in love with running. only then did i understand that i could just keep running and running, sometimes 100 miles a week. WHAT MADE YOU DECIDE TO RUN A MARATHON? once i took up running, it was always in the back of my mind to run a marathon. i didn’t know i’d actually do it. The longest run i do once a week is a 20-mile run. i didn’t think i could actually do 26 miles. But i got the urge to try.
Photo by: Moss Media
Photo by: Moss Media
HOW DID YOU CHOOSE THE BIG SUR INTERNATIONAL MARATHON FOR YOUR FIRST MARATHON?
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at first, i really didn’t want to run Big Sur because i know it’s a really tough course, and i know you can’t run it fast. it wasn’t so much that it was the 25th anniversary; although that became all the more exciting leading up to it. But, rather than making the investment to go to Boston or new york for my first marathon, i decided i’d rather experience it in my home area, support the local event. Contd... Page 81
Clothing + jewelry slb women’s Clothing Cannery row, monterey see. Page 71 advertisement location the inn at Del monte beach
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Sept. Q ‘10 | 19
Material love
Some of the things our editors Love right now
BY SAMANTHA GRILLO AND QUINN TO
The Marriage of Vintage and Modern Grandma’s jewelry
Sometimes grandma’s jewelry box is better than something new and shiny. Find great original pieces—dainty, bold, simple or intricate, just polish them up and rock them. Heirloom jewelry makes for great conversation, not to mention it offers a unique look and is often very well made. guys- don’t feel left out, grandpa might have some vintage watches and cufflinks as well. remember you don’t have to depend solely on your relatives for jewelry that is aged to perfection, consignment shops or estate sales may provide the diamond in the rough you’re looking for. Polaroid Cameras There is just something fun and nostalgic about Polaroid cameras. Maybe it’s the instant gratification of a tangible picture within minutes, or the old school quality that takes us back to good times from the past. Check out the newest upgrade in the Polaroid instant cameras, the Pogo. With the all-in-one digital camera and printer, you can snap and print digital pictures on the go. either way, it’s worthwhile to keep one around for instant laughs and permanent memories.
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Recycled Decor Antiquated decor can translate to treasure if you are looking to create a trendy shabby-chic look for your home. Antique furniture, vintage signs, old-fashioned dishes and glassware, and classic vases have potential to be repurposed into something beautiful and modern. Give vintage pieces a modern touch. Put a new stain on an old table, reupholster a chair in a fresh new fabric, repaint a hanging chandelier in a new vibrant color, and voilà! Vintage meets modern in a unique transformation! Something Old, Something New We love vintage inspired clothes that still have a hint of modern trends. The juxtaposition of inspiration and innovation is funky, fun and fresh. A classic silhouette in a bright bold fabric, or an ultramodern cut in a pretty floral print can make a piece pop. Adding decorative accents or details to an otherwise simple piece also draws a vintage inspired look. For this season, we love old-fashioned floral prints on flirty summer dresses and preppy or nautical styled tees, sweaters and jackets, with touches of vintage lace or buttons for a old meets new style. Cobalt Blue Shoes This summer, jewel tones have ruled the runways as well as the sidewalks. Bright turquoises, velvety purples and vibrant cobalt blues have been showcased with accessories, full on gowns and of course our favorite, shoes. Everyone from Steve Madden to Brian Atwood has put out an amazing array of footwear in this luxe shade. A statement shoe with an eye-catching color does all the work for you. The rest of the ensemble can be as simple or intricate as you choose. Rich hues look stunning on sun kissed skin but can also be worn into the fall with slight adjustments. Perfume Jewelry. When the sun graces our peninsula with its rays of warmth, it can be difficult to keep your scent fresh throughout the day. Rather than lugging heavy perfume bottles around, designers have come up with a fashionable solution: solid perfume in rings, necklaces and key chains. It’s an ingenious concept that not only allows a pleasant smell all day, but also adds an accessory to your outfit. Double score. Marc Jacobs makes these adorable rings in his two scents, Lola and Daisy.
Sept. Q ‘10 | 21
Shaken Not Stirred: A
Fundraiser
for Chile By Noël M. Gray
Many hearts broke open on February 27, 2010 as the first of several earthquakes hit Chile. There were an estimated 486 casualties and countless wounded and homeless. The shaken nation entered three days of mourning, while other nations mounted a global relief effort. Global Majority, a local organization known for promoting global non-violent conflict resolution, recognized the need for supplies and support. “People were sending us funeral pictures—pictures of communities gathered around a bonfire trying to gather sleeping bags,” recalls Global Majority Vice President, Lejla Mavris.
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Photo by: Moss Media
Photo by: Moss Media
Global Majority already had ties to Chile. In January 2010, Global Majority and the Center of Human Rights Studies facilitated an educational program. With 21 local students in attendance, Dr. Jan Black, a professor at the Monterey Institute of International Studies, and Juan Guzman designed a program to assist students in understanding the abuse and discrimination indigenous Chilean people suffer. contd.page 79
Photo by: Moss Media
1169 Forest Ave., Pacific Grove (Across from
Trader Joe’s)
www.gregdowsdojo.com
Jaguar Monterey 1711 Del Monte Blvd Seaside, CA 93955 Phone: (831) 899-8800 Fax: (831) 899-8828 www.samlinder.com
SAM LINDER 24 | Sept. Q ‘10
AUTO GROUP
Indian Summer
A Retro Modern Fixation
Chica Boom
Luna Park
By michelle ngoi Styled by Alli wood
As visual details of the peninsula’s landscape become more vibrant during Indian summer, so do local wardrobe choices. 831 created a 60’s and 70’s modern look, inspired by the region’s Indian summer. Bright and shiny metallic color pallets and retro infused cuts are fitted but comfortable. The peninsula’s laidback beach vibe and culture, combined with a fresh but modern twist is powerful. These clothing and styling elements are easily transferable from Indian summer to coastal fall. The California coast is known for its retro and vintage trend setting. But 831 has switched up the look, converting bright colors and statement pieces into modern street and beachwear. With its historical significance, bright colors, and patterns, the Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk seemed an obvious choice to compliment the vintage and modern neon colored pieces. The area’s list of secondhand vintage shops and thrift stores is further evidence that this look is here to stay. With the marriage of bright 60’s retro patterns, shapes, and
silhouettes, and couture-like, ultra modern cuts, and pieces, 831 has created a unique glamorous retro look. Fashion is a never-ending story. This story begins in a retro space-like dream. Distinctive color elements take center stage with yellow, teal, and metallic gold color blocking techniques. And bold statement pieces, which would make Lady Gaga and her brave artistic style team envious, complete the look. Make a statement of your own this fall and try a high-waisted pant or short. Or reinvent the bohemian hippie-chic style by combining a 1940’s silhouette, bright pink patterned top, or a sleek 1970’s style long sleeved shirt. Hair is another important element, and we’ve paired all the looks with a modern take on 60’s dos, and modern romantic hairstyles. Prevalent looks this season for guys are bright 1960’s silhouettes, clean lines, and bright colors. Look for them in classic tee shirts, short shorts, and dark tinted retro shades. Another Indian summer worthy element to dive into this season is a fitted bathing suit with retro 70’s detail. They can have interesting cuts, vintage inspired de-
signs, or a modern look and feel. To spice up a hot Indian summer day or night, wear a metallic bikini as a statement piece, either alone or under a mesh dress top. The tastefully bold look for Indian summer is a new approach to your fall wardrobe. Bright patterns, solid colors, high waisted 70’s pants and silhouettes can be worn as statement pieces or stand alone, when layered. White platform pumps are one statement piece that makes an outfit more visibly interesting. This piece is essentially ready to wear couture and should be rocked by someone with a diehard love for shoes. Brave, bold, and ambitious fashion statements are what 831 is about. The right shoe or accessory can make take an outfit from ordinary to extraordinary. The reinvention of unique statement pieces into accessible statement pieces will complete your Indian summer style. Make your own style statement by picking pieces that will compliment your wardrobe. The heat waves of 831’s Indian summer only come once a year, so use fun statement pieces and modern-retro styling to shake up your own personal style this fall.
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Chica B o 26 | Sept. Q ‘10
B oom Photography - Moss Media, Carmel
Clothing - Retro Paradise, Santa Cruz Models - Jason and Kendall Hair - Kepare, Capitola Makeup - Crystal Arnold Location - Venetian Courts, Capitola, CA
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Photo by: Moss Media
Chica Boom
Photo by: Moss Media
Chica Boom
Sept. Q ‘10 | 29
Chica Boom
30 | Sept. Q ‘10
Photo: Moss Media Carmel
The Mucky Duck Restaurant & Bar
479 Alvarado Street. Monterey ,CA 831.655.3031 www.MuckyDuckMonterey.com
Sept. Q ‘10 | 31
Luna P 32 | Sept. Q ‘10
Park
Photography : Moss Media, Carmel Hair & Makeup - Shimeko Franklin Model - Sarah Clothing - Inago, Carmel Shoes - Footsie, Carmel Jewelry - Beadsmyth Location - Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk, Santa Cruz, Ca Sept. Q ‘10 | 33
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Photo by: Moss Media
Photo by: Moss Media
Luna Park
Photo by: Moss Media
Luna Park
Sept. Q ‘10 | 35
6th Annual Mega Mixer
Hot Laps at Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca
Photo by: Moss Media
MCYPG Salinas Jaycees Central Coast Young Farmers & Ranchers
36 | Sept. Q ‘10
“Where Nature Converges With Comfort And Style” The Sanctuary Beach Resort • 3295 Dunes Drive, Marina, CA 93933 • Toll-Free: 1.877.944.3863 • Local: 831.883.9478 www.thesanctuarybeachresort.com facebook.com/SanctuaryBeachResort
Sept. Q ‘10 | 37
feature Brian Orosco can leap small buildings in a single bound. He can scale walls, turn rooftops into stepping stones, bounce off a bus, flip off a fence, and land on his feet. Something akin to an animated action hero, he is a professional freerunner who lets nothing get in his way. Freerunning, often known as parkour, is a physical discipline founded in France, whose participants are trained to move fast and free, overcoming any obstacle in their path by shifting form and flexibility to suit the situation. Although parkour athletes are concerned with getting from point A to point B as quickly and efficiently as possible, freerunning is more about self expression, and involves both forward and backward movement. A hybrid of martial arts meets acrobatics meets gymnastics meets track & field; this is the stuff of stunt work. Some call parkour a performance, while others see it as a sport. Orosco considers it a lifestyle. Raised in Pebble Beach, Orosco went to Carmel River School, Carmel Middle School and Stevenson School before attending USC. His intent was to study business, but he discovered the School of Policy, Planning and Development, whose urban planning curriculum more closely fit the real estate development careers of his father and brothers before him. “My whole life, I thought real estate was going to be my career,” said Orosco from his San Francisco home. “It’s what my whole family does.” His father, Don Orosco, and his brothers, Patrick and Chris, also are established racecar drivers. Don Orosco Development and Orosco Racing both began in 1975 and developed along a parallel track. After he sold his first shopping center, Don took his first course at Sears Point Racing School and that was the beginning of life in the fast lane. His sons grew up in and around the sport, and have been involved ever since. Orosco also felt the need for speed, creating his own course off the racetrack and spending every waking moment with freerunning. This has expanded to include print media, film, television, web and live performances.
image © andy batt - www.andybatt.com
Orosco shares the details with 831.
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Catching up with freerunner Brian Orosco By Lisa Crawford Watson
image © andy batt - www.andybatt.com
U n f e t tN e i r nj ea d W a r r i o r
How did parkour get started? Most people give credit to the origin of the sport to David Belle or, actually, his father, Raymond Belle, during military training in France. He created it as an escape technique. If you think of fight or flight, this is the flight portion of it. I also credit its development to the Yamakasi, a French group of parkour practitioners among whom David was a founder. From there, it kind of morphed into an urban phenomenon, moving from rural jungles and forests into the urban setting, which gave way to its current form, more of an art form or a sport than a necessity. How did you get out of real estate and into freerunning? I did real estate because that’s what my family was into. I was always somewhat of a follower. I do like to lead, but I never had a clear goal. In 5th grade, for yearbook, we had to write what we wanted to be when we grew up. I remember my response was, “I just want to be a normal guy and be happy with my family.” That’s still how I want to be. I don’t really care what it is as long as I feel I’ve accomplished something with my life and I’m happy. I never really thought about the specifics of that.
image © andy batt - www.andybatt.com
But I was always an athlete. When I was in middle school, I was one of those kids who would run and climb and jump off things. My buddy, Steve Knovick, and I started with freestyle walking in shoes with grind plates on them. In high school, I put it in my back pocket forgot about it for awhile, as I got interested in other things. But in my freshman year of college, I got a call from Steve, who said, “Hey, there’s a name for that thing we used to do; it’s called parkour.” When I graduated and moved to San
Francisco, I started searching for different things to do. I looked into club teams for softball or football, and then I thought of that conversation with Steve. I Googled SF parkour, and that’s what popped up. I’ve been involved with the local parkour community since that day.
pany called Five Ten. I tried on a pair and was totally blown away. Now, when I do a wall run, instead of stepping on wall and slipping off, my foot sticks like glue. I found that Five Ten was in the process of developing a freerunning shoe called, not surprisingly, the Freerunner.
How did you develop the strength and skill to participate in parkour?
I set my sights on being sponsored by Five Ten and spent a lot of time developing my skill until I felt worthy of asking them to sponsor me. They became aware of my efforts and offered me a sponsorship deal. To pick up that sponsorship after training for just a year, I began to see another side of it, that I could actually make something of it. Rather than it being hobby, it was a career.
I went to a jam, where a bunch of people get together and run around for a couple of hours, at San Francisco State University. Being an athlete, I was always able to pick up things very quickly. I wanted to get in with the veterans, so I could learn at a quicker rate. But it was still a very new sport, so there were not many veterans and even fewer experienced teachers. Everything at that point was trial and error. I would just watch someone and try it myself. Which is something I’ve always been good at. My nickname since childhood is NoSole, which I came by honestly, as I had a tendency to bruise my feet a lot with all I did. At the time, I picked it up as a hobby, something to stay in shape. I purchased a road cycle to complement training and get my conditioning. Steadily, over the first year of training, once a month turned into every day. During that first year, I had to learn a lot because I had no previous training in martial arts or gymnastics, other than a trampoline in my back yard. Learning how to be aware of my body and how it moves through space took me a long way. How did you turn your parkour hobby into a career? At a jam in Southern California, I met a group wearing shoes by a rock climbing com-
During training, I met Paul Darnell out of Virginia, who was creating Tempest Freerunning, a professional team to be used in the entertainment world. Paul asked me to join the team, and I started doing back flips in my apartment. It was the first time I realized I might be able to change my life and do what I like. But I had a decision to make. Do I leave real estate and a comfortable paycheck? I joined the team, which started opening up doors and my thought process. Because I had learned so much so quickly and had made so many connections, I established myself as one of top freerunners in this country and started getting jobs every few months. What is one of your most important contributions to parkour? As part of my regular commitments, I now teach classes twice a week at The Athletic Playground in Emeryville, in addition to SFPK’s beginner jams, which are solely devoted to instructing new traceurs, another word for parkour Contd... Page 81
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Bringing the Nightclub to you
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Lighting A/V rentals Bar rentals Pipe & Drapes Tent Rentals Tables & Chairs Furniture Rentals Table Linen & Decor Dance Floor & Staging Decor - Theme Design Outdoor Accessories
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T-shirts an d
Message tees are all the rage. The streets are filled with walking billboards, as people display slogans by their favorite brands, causes, and organizations. Even politicians are cashing in on the fad—and who could blame them? It’s effective, especially since more and more young people are getting involved in government. Their mission: breathe new life into their communities and give a voice to young professionals. 831 caught up with five locals under the age of 40 who are eager to freshen up the face of our parents’ politics, and are passionately committed to being involved in their hometowns. “I think in the past, younger people were below the radar. I think they felt more like visitors than part of the community,” 33-year-old Jason Burnett says, sipping on his latte in the late afternoon sun. Burnett was recently elected as a new member of the Carmel City Council. “I think it’s important that we help [young] people realize you’re not visitors in your community. You live in your community.”
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34-year-old Kimbley Craig, currently a Salinas City Council candidate, grew up on the Monterey Peninsula and has fought fiercely to work, live and play in her beloved community. “I’m not a politician. I’m not,” Craig says emphatically. “But I’m someone who fiercely cares about where she lives. For me, it’s about being involved. If you want to make a difference you have to be involved. ‘You have to be involved’ that’s what my t-shirt would say,” she says, nodding her head. Unfortunately, the 831 area does not lend itself well to promoting a youthful community. The rent is high. Steady jobs that pay well and include healthy benefits are few and far between. Most of us are overworked and underpaid. Like Craig, many young professionals have had to sacrifice dreams of driving the BMW X series, buying the latest runway fashions, or eating out at the newest hotspot in Carmel. It’s the price many of us are willing to pay so that we can afford to live in the picturesque postcard of the Monterey Peninsula.
Photo by: Moss Media
BY Lindsey A. Douros
For many young professionals like Burnett, Monterey County can be a difficult place to put roots down. Known as a city for “newlyweds” and “nearly-deads”, it can be especially hard for any single 20-or-30-something.
n d Politics Five years ago, 36-year-old Steve McShane founded McShane’s Nursery & Landscape Supply on Highway 68 in Salinas. For McShane, giving back to a community that supports his entrepreneur lifestyle is a responsibility, and is the reason behind his success as a young professional in Monterey County.
Photo by: Moss Media
“If I could design my own message t-shirt…” McShane pauses, rolling the idea around in his head. “My t-shirt would read: ‘Grab hold of your future. Be a part of your future. Get involved in your community.’” “In the heart of all this, I want to set an example to my generation,” McShane continues. “I want to get more young professionals involved. There’s too many of us distracted by our careers. We need to engage in the community we live and work in.” And he’s right—how many of us really feel like we have time to go to the polls? There are only 24-hours in a day, eight or more of which we spend at work—away from our hobbies, friends, and families. So, it’s no small wonder that at the end of a
long day, we’re not storming city council. Chaotic schedules make for chaotic lifestyles, not often conducive to roles in organizational leadership. Regardless of their busy lifestyles, Burnett, Craig, and McShane have carefully carved out time to actively participate in their communities. For these young residents, there are no excuses for not being involved. Fifth-generation Santa Cruz native Kevin Moon didn’t hop on the political bandwagon for business-related reasons. The 33-year-old saw a need in his community for the younger demographic to have a voice. Moon realized that if he wasn’t willing to sacrifice his time, he had no one to blame his frustrations on, except himself. “I got involved in politics out of necessity,” Moon says. “I had a man try to break into my home while I was home with my two girls. If you can’t feel safe in your own town, what’s going on?” Moon sighs. “We’ve catered to a group of people who do not give back to society and to me that’s unacceptable.”
Moon’s greatest frustration lies in his belief that people not from Santa Cruz, who are not invested in the culture and growth of his hometown, are shaping his town’s future. Moon’s first two loves may be his family and surfing the waves of the northern coast. But his growing passion to strengthen the voice of young professionals and excite youthful community involvement may soon be close contenders—at least for his surfing habits.
“My wife is really the fashionista but I know my t-shirt would read: ‘If you don’t live here, don’t surf here,’” he says, stabbing a finger at the table. Hometown pride is a strong bond that these political newcomers share. The youngest candidate for Salinas City Council, Salinas native Brian Showalter’s commitment to being involved in his community is just as strong as any of his running mates. As a member of the Marine Reserve Corps, his dedication to protecting the community and people he loves is obvious. “I love helping out in the community,” Showalter says, a toothy grin spreading across his square jaw line. “I get more enjoyment out of volunteering or doing some fundraiser event than most people my age. Maybe that makes me a geek but I see a need in the Salinas area.” A board member for the local Salinas Junior Chamber, Showalter’s favorite fundraiser is during Christmas; last year, they raised $57,000.00 and took 450 underprivi-
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election with more than 71% of all the votes—a rare feat for a newcomer going up against so many incumbents. “I’m on a steep learning curve,” Burnett acknowledges. “It’s fun but it also takes a lot of time to do things right. Right now, I’m really happy to have the privilege to serve Carmel.” Although Burnett has extensive experience in politics (previously, he worked in Washington DC for 10 years on solutions for global warming), newcomers like Showalter refuse to let their lack of political expertise define their ability to be focal points for change in their communities.
“I bring a fresh new viewpoint,” Showalter explains, tugging at his collar. “I plan on being in Salinas for the next 50 years of my life, so the things I do now will have a snowball effect. If one of us gets elected, it’ll bring some much-needed freshness to the city council,” he says, referring to himself and fellow candidates Craig and McShane.
Although McShane is not entirely new to the political scene, he believes leaders are not defined by their age or level of expertise, but rather by their capability to meet the needs of the people. “I think voters today base their decision on skill, ability, and proven leadership—all of which can come at any age,” McShane expounds. “Young professionals use a slightly different language and find a different type of appeal.” For McShane and others, the leadership styles of the past have felt far removed from the reality of day-to-day life. McShane argues that while the leadership style of
young professionals is more informal, it is also more consensual and open, making it more accessible to the people in the communities it effects. Burnett agrees with McShane, “I feel like there’s a lot of people who don’t feel like their government is accessible. They may have a
great idea but they feel like there’s no way to actually get it done.” “Ask me!” Burnett exclaims, pointing to where he would like this slogan displayed on his white polo. “There’s no way for me to do it if I don’t know what it is so just ask me.” It’s not surprising that the desire for an accessible government is also integral to Craig, who founded a media planning and advertising company. “That’s what you get when you elect me,” she explains. “I’m far more open. I’m very accessible and I think that’s important as a politician to be accessible.”
With the recent phenomena of social networking sites like Facebook and LinkedIn, and the addition of the Blackberry and iPhone, the 35-and-under crowd is only a keystroke or text away from instantly updating our social circle. We are fueled by a desire for instant information, whether it’s sharing it or gaining it. While earlier generations may Contd... Page 79
Local Tshirt companies From left to right Brandon - Bandit Brand, Amanda - Apples & Bandaids, Gabriella - Liquid, Jacob - So Fresh, Heather - Idle Hands
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“A hundred thousand welcomes” Open 7 Days a Week 11:30 am - 2:00 am
3772 The Barnyard Carmel, CA 93923 831-625-5500 www.flanaganscarmel.com Burgers - Fish & Chips - Darts & Pool - Patio w/Firepit - Fox Soccer Plus - Dog Friendly Patio
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scene
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Taste of Seaside Poppy Hills Mixer by MCYPG
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Photo by: Moss Media
Sister Act
Wine, Women and Success Sisters Robin and Andrea McBride launch eco.love wines
by Lisa Crawford Watson
Robin and Andrea McBride wander row upon row of grapes on the vine, fingering the lush, leafy foliage and tasting the succulent fruit as they move through their Marlborough vineyard to hail the harvest. Photos find them wearing sundresses and rain
boots or cocktail frocks and fashion footwear or maybe Wranglers and Wellingtons, depending on what they’re doing - or what they’re wearing says about wine. Born in Los Angeles to the same father, the McBrides are sisters of another mother, who were raised apart but were destined to be together. They grew up sexy and smart, and apologize for neither,
parlaying both, instead, into a business that promises “wine for the new world.” Robin was raised in Monterey, near one of the most prominent wine regions in the world. Andrea grew up grape farming in Marlborough, New Zealand. Robin started her family early and entered international business, getting into the rhythm and feel of moving product around the globe. Andrea went to USC on a scholarship for track & field and volleyball, and graduated ready for business. The two were primed throughout their lives for a pairing of wine and women in business. As soon as they realized it, they founded eco.love wines, a venture that would bring wine out of New Zealand and into the lives of the young and the restless. Their market is young, bright, responsible, motivated, socially and environmentally conscious, and equally determined to make a difference and have a good time. “Eco.love wines,” said Andrea, “is a brand based on eco-friendly, sustainable principles paired with a love of life and people and wine. It’s about having a good time and making memories. It’s about forgetting all the snobbery often Photo by: Moss Media
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associated with fine wine; about making wine for people who are not super sophisticated but love a good wine, people who are more focused on enjoying good friends and good wine than studying them.” Robin and Andrea convened on an uncharacteristically warm summer day at The Inn at Del Monte Beach, an elegant Beaux Arts-style boutique hotel that has become a favorite meeting spot, to discuss the venture that began six years ago and comes to fruition this year. How did eco.love wines get started? Robin: We were in the wine industry for a few years and, over time, it became obvious to us that we wanted to do something new and different, to reach an underserved market we know well. Andrea: We began by importing New Zealand boutique wines, such as St Lukes Estate Wines from Marlborough, which was significant because this is my mother’s brother’s wine company, and I grew up participating in the planting of those grapes. It was
humble beginnings, really, but our confidence was built by knowing that a lot of wines coming into the United States are mass produced, while ours is hand crafted from a much smaller yield per acre. The success of this venture enabled us to move out of the Marlborough region to access other parts of New Zealand. What makes eco.love wines so special? Robin: We are partners with the New Zealand Wine Company, which is the first carbon-zero company in the world. Carbon zero means being vigilant about climate change. It means we are carbon neutral; our production emits no carbon footprint. This is essential to us because everything we do has environmental consideration built into it. We use super lightweight glass, for example, and a cold cellar system that draws cool air in from outside and eliminates the need for air conditioning. Andrea: And it’s because we have rock star vineyard managers. We have rock star viticulturalists. We have rock star winemakers. Our vision is to make awesome, quality wines that everyone
can enjoy, with minimal environmental impact. How do people learn about your wines? Andrea: We have been rethinking the way people receive information about wine. When we look at other sources of wine education, we find heavy text with extremely complicated concepts. Our approach is to layer the information on our site; to offer beauty and entertainment and history, but to reduce the text and layer in the information. If you want to learn more, there are layers to delve into. For the beginning wine drinker, as your palate develops with experience, the second layer will become more meaningful. Once the bulb goes off and you are ready, you can venture into the third, more complex layer. This should be fun. You have been distributing New Zealand wines in the United States. Will you release wine under your own label? Robin: Yes, in just two months, we will launch Lineage, our own label, in California stores. We have chosen stores that fit our brand image of the youthful adult wine drinker who is concerned about the environment and likes to have fun. We also will access 36 states, online. Our first launch will present our whites, a Sauvignon Blanc and a Riesling. During the first quarter of next year, we will introduce a varietal.
Photo by: Moss Media
How will you access your market segment? Andrea: We will get out into the wine industry and the community by hosting special events targeted at what we consider an underserved demographic, who want to find wine accessible, and to be able to interact with wine and enjoy it. We are our own customer; there hasn’t been a brand that speaks to us, that fits our mentality and our lifestyle. At the end of the day we ask ourselves, “If we weren’t in the wine industry, would we like this wine?” Yes. Absolutely yes.
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scene
Masquerade night at Lux12, Carmel
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A Man’s Perspective
Women’s Clothing
“Sweetie,” she says, her voice dripping with enough sugar to make a dentist rich for life, “can you help me zip up?” Of course, I say yes. I know that if I don’t help her, we won’t be able to get to work until at least 4 PM next Friday. The clothes take that much effort to put on.
By Blaise Douros
Most men claim that they have no interest in fashion, and especially not in women’s clothing. This is a lie. Ask the man in your life: “Honey Bear, are you interested in women’s fashion?” He will answer “no,” and give you a funny look—after all, you’ve never called him that before, and this feels like one of those loaded questions about which of your girlfriends he finds the most attractive. “Then why,” you can say, all innocence, “did you save all those Victoria’s Secrets and Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Editions in that box in the garage?” You’ll be amazed at how talkative he gets after that. The truth is that we men are fascinated by women’s fashion. As a matter of fact, men have to learn about women’s clothing. They study it constantly, although they would never admit to it publicly. But they have two very good reasons for doing this.
wq
Reason one is simple: Sex. It’s all well and good for the movies to show Gerard Butler tearing off his lover’s clothes. In real life, wives and girlfriends tend to get miffed if we’ve just destroyed the brand new Calvin Klein dress that made her so irresistible in the first place. When your lady gets upset…you do the math, men. So guys need to know how to take a lady’s clothing off without damaging them. This is far more difficult than it sounds. Let’s face it, gents; how were WE supposed to know that particular bra is made of a fabric woven from the back hair of a rare Malaysian tree-dwelling ferret, and can’t be allowed to be in the sun or touch the floor or even be washed for fear of it exploding into a million tiny pieces? If that ferret-fur bra gets injured, you can bet that you will, too. Forget romance that night. Reason two is much, much more complicated.
I’ve been married for two years now. There are many things I still don’t understand, like how the dirtdetecting radar works, or why that certain look gets me to turn off the video games and do the dishes right now without her even saying anything. But there’s one thing I have figured out. Every morning at 7:38 AM, my wife Lindsey pokes her head out of the bedroom door. I am dressed and ready to go. She is wearing very little, and flutters her eyelashes.
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She asks for help so often that it got me to thinking: the fashion industry seems to cater to the single woman, but I ask you: if they really were aiming at singles, then why would women’s clothing require collaborative dressing? Let’s do some math. A woman who has a Collaborative Dressing Partner can shave a lot of time off of her morning dressing schedule. I’ve never had the chance to watch a single woman dress (hey, back off; my wife could be reading this), but if Lindsey is any indication, a woman living by herself probably needs to start dressing at least twenty minutes earlier. Then subtract the time saved by having someone to say “Yes, that looks fine. Time to go.” That shaves another twenty minutes of trying on several different outfits. Factor in the ability to touch up makeup in the car while someone else drives, and you’ve probably saved at least an hour every morning. An hour less per day doesn’t seem like much, but think about it: that means that single women are getting at least one hour less sleep per night than their cohabitating friends. Five hours less per week ends up being 260 hours per year—roughly 10.8 days. The fashion industry is deliberately trying to make single women sleep-deprived and cranky to encourage them to partner up. It pays big dividends for fashion designers to covertly encourage women to share expenses. This way they don’t have to spend as much money on rent and food, and have more disposable income to spend on clothes. It’s shocking, I know, but it’s completely true. Dominated by powerful men like Christian Dior, Giorgio Armani, and Marc Jacobs, the global style business is manipulating you into a relationship. You’ll notice, too, that the most powerful women in the biz are older, like Donatella Versace and Diane von Furstenburg, and we all know how older women love to play matchmaker. They’re in on it too. As a guy, it’s kind of comforting knowing that all these huge corporations are rooting for you; because believe me, some of my buddies are going to need some serious corporate sponsorship if anyone is ever going to marry them. And frankly, it’s just great to finally have some confirmation that Victoria’s Secret really is a major ally to men all over the world. I say, why fight the power? You’ll sleep more, save time in the morning, and make your partner deliriously happy that they get to help dress (and undress!) the body they love. Because believe me, we men don’t mind it one bit. Bring on the buttons, zippers and fasteners. This is one conspiracy I can get behind 100%, and I’ll even zip it up while I’m back there.
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Lighting A/V rentals Bar rentals Pipe & Drapes Tent Rentals Tables & Chairs Furniture Rentals Table Linen & Decor Dance Floor & Staging Decor - Theme Design Outdoor Accessories
DnaEnt.com 831.372.5555
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NYc
to
Launching her first full collection, Spring 2011 By Samantha Grillo
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“I always wanted to pursue something in fashion,” Jean says. “I just didn’t think I could, because I came from Monterey and I didn’t think I could make any kind of impact.” From a young age, Noel knew she wanted to be involved with the fashion industry. At 19, she moved to Los Angeles to attend the Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising and begin her studies as a design student. During her coursework, she also worked as a wardrobe stylist, gaining experience and garnering knowledge about the industry. A few years later, with a degree in hand, some valuable experience under her belt, and a dream in her heart, she was ready for the next step. Just last year, Noel took a leap of faith, which has lead her to her dream in the city that never sleeps.
Photo by: Jose Infante
N oe l Je an
From 831 to New York City, 27-year-old Salinas native Noel Jean is leaving her roots behind to pursue her passion for fashion. Spring 2011 will mark the launch of Noel’s first full collection, self-titled ‘NoelJean’. But Jean wasn’t always certain of her ability to succeed.
“It’s been really exciting, really nerve wracking, and it’s been a learning experience but it’s wonderful,” Jean says. “I think coming from a small town is a blessing rather than a hindrance. It’s really wonderful to come from a humble beginning and a smaller community because it just makes you appreciate things a lot more, and I never forget
Photo by: Odessy Barbu where i come from and what i am working for.” Jean lives to express her own eclectic, downtown-chic style. But she does it with a sophisticated flair. “i really like to change things up,” Jean explains. “That’s what i think is fun about being in fashion, being able to change and do different things everyday. it’s an expression of who you are.” While her own unique sense of style is sure to influence future designs, for her Spring collection, Jean says she was mostly inspired by Frida Kahlo. The collection will reflect the Mexican folk artist’s work, filled with bright colors, and Jean’s deliberately naïve tastes. “[Frida] was a strong, independent woman, and a very liberal person, as far as her way of thinking and her approach to art,” Jean says. “in this collection i want to embrace that empowerment.”
“as a working professional, you have to be able to transition well when you have to go from place to place,” Jean says. “i like to keep it classic as far as silhouettes and use different textures and fabrics to give a modern edge to a piece.” But perhaps more than creating fashion, Jean loves learning about the process of fashion. relatively new to the fashion scene, Jean will be the first to admit she has a lot to learn. Jean’s humble attitude works to her advantage, as she gains priceless knowledge from the fashion veterans she’s met along her journey. “every time you meet a new person in the
Sneak Peek: noel Jean’s spring 2011 collection
More specifically, Jean will use bright and bold colors, prints, and draped silhouettes to capture the essence of Frida’s Kahlo’s artwork. Jean’s own onthe-go lifestyle is also reflected in her new designs, which will feature transitional pieces you can easily transform from day to night. Bold, modern, cosmopolitan, are what defines the designer’s upcoming line.
Kim Kardashian wearing one of noel’s pieces from her SPring 2011 Collection.
Contd... Page 81
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Techstyle
Videophones: Living in the Future By Blaise Douros & RONNY HARALDSVIK When you were a kid and watched a lot of Star Trek, the idea of the communication screen was pretty amazing. “Put it on viewer,” Captain Picard (or Kirk, depending on how old you are) would say. And then a guy in lots of rubber makeup would appear on the monitor, and tell them that unless the Federation would please stop menacing the Kluudorian Collective, they were going to get a phaser blast up their collective warp drives. It made for great TV. The point is that videophone technology seemed impossible, and except when you visited Epcot Center, you probably thought you would never experience it for yourself. But the tech industry is populated by people who liked Star Trek, and they decided they wanted to make their technological fantasies come true. So today, we have all kinds of technology that seems like it’s not too far removed from Spock’s toolbox. Take the cell phone. It’s come a long way since the old Motorola phones, which were designed to flip open by a Star Trek fan (true story). This year, Samsung premiered a phone called the Galaxy S that can shoot 720p video. In other words, HD-quality video in your pocket. Over 65% of TVs in America are lower-resolution than the Galaxy S. And its 5 megapixels of still image resolution are higher quality than some of the $5,000 professional cameras of 2001. How about that for living in the future? Most phones these days contain microprocessors that outpace the computers of yesteryear. For example—the iPhone’s
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processor is faster than most of the original Pentium 2 processors that powered your first dial-up forays onto the Internet. As a matter of fact, your digital wristwatch is about as powerful as the room-sized computer that landed two men on the moon. “What about my videophone,” you ask? There’s an app, as the phrase goes, for that. Now, if you don’t know about Skype, which allows you to videochat live with anyone else with a webcam, then you probably haven’t been overseas in the last five years. It’s absolutely the easiest (not to mention free!) way to do a videochat from your computer. All you need is a webcam, computer, and an internet connection. Did we mention it’s free? “Not good enough,” you say, “I want it handheld.” Well, Cisco recently released an iPhone version of its popular WebEx videoconferencing software on the App Store. More and more smartphones are supporting live video apps, and as networks get faster and more robust, we predict an explosion of new technology allowing us to connect face-to-face from anywhere in the world. Of course, the possibilities are endless. You could attend class from the beach (although your professor might frown on it). If you’re on a business trip, you could still see a live stream of your kids’ soccer game and cheer them on from the road. Finally, if you want to see one of the latest weird iterations of the videochat craze, check out ChatRoulette.com. It’s a simple concept—you press start, and get connected live to a stranger. If you’re interested in starting a conversation with the person you see, just start talking. If you don’t like their face, or vice versa, click away and get connected to someone new. It’s the speed dating of the Internet age. You’ll most likely see some exhibitionists, so be prepared to click away quickly if their camera is showing more skin than you wanted to see… The bottom line is that videophones are no longer the domain of science fiction, and handheld videoconferencing is going to be pretty common in the near future. There are only two questions left to be answered: (1) how will you use video in your daily life, and (2) will you please stop menacing the Kluudorian Collective?
Photo By Moss Media, Carmel
Executive Security Agency Raising the Standard 831.206.9979 www.theESA.com Sept. Q ‘10 | 57
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By
Make Up
Crystal Arnold 831.915.5474
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Carmel, Santa Cruz
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profile WRITTEN BY DANNY KEITH
H a b
The rise, fall and redemption of the surfing legend…
“Man, cutting the grass kills me,” he smiles, pulling an inhaler out of his pocket. as we get settled in his living room, he throws his feet up and wipes his face. “i love just chilling in my living room,” he says. i can’t help thinking that this is a much-changed Flea from the legend of years past. Living through the era of The Westside brigade, i have many clear memories of his rise to the top as a premier surfer. darryl “Flea” Virostko was 21 when his first sponsorship paychecks started rolling in. He had always dreamed of one day being a pro surfer, a dream his late grandma had originally scoffed at. Later in his career he would fondly remember “hooking” grandma up with red oakleys that she would wear while riding around in her impala. along with his friends Jason “ratboy” Collins and Shawn “Barney” Barron, this Westside trio of surfers would change the face of surfing forever and firmly plant Santa Cruz on the map. They surfed 2 foot to 50 foot without regard, dominating huge airs and progressing big wave riding to a level never before seen. “i was not a three to the beach guy, i loved to do tricks and ramp out,” Flea states. “What we did in that era opened the eyes of pro surfing in so many ways. People were like, you can make money doing airs, big wave surfing and just ramping out? They changed the whole criteria on the aSP (association of Surfing Professionals) World Tour and the World Qualifying Series. now airs and progressive maneuvers are part of the deal.” in 1999, Flea was crowned the champion of the big-wave competition Maverick’s; again in 2002 and 2004. He landed on the cover of Surfer Magazine after his wipeout on a 50-foot wave at Waimea during the eddie aikau Contest, later declared “wipeout of the decade.” Major motion pictures riding giants and Step into Liquid put him on the big screen. But there was another side to the story; his willingness to try any wave began crossing over into his personal life. Partying became the norm; whenever contd ... Page 78
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Photo by moss media, Carmel
F l e a
i pull up outside the house that darryl “Flea” Virostko shares with his mother, and can’t help noticing the freshly cut lawn. i knock on the door—no answer. i’m afraid that this means no interview—but luckily, that’s not the case this time, as Virostko comes walking around the corner with a mask over his mouth.
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Photo By Moss Media, Carmel
By Samantha Grillo
When you’re a kid, a band-aid heals everything. But as we grow up, that band-aid becomes little more than a symbolic image. But what if there was a way to stretch that band-aid a little wider, make its effects transcend a little further? Santa Cruz native Matt Clevenger is doing his best to make that dream a reality. His company, Apples and Bandaids, is a local clothing company seeking to reach that goal, one t-shirt at a time.
Apples and Bandaids
“I’m not here to make money, I’m really trying to do my part in changing the world,” he says. Just over a year ago, Matt decided he wanted to leverage his clothing company to aid developing countries by raising money to donate food, medical supplies, and support to those in need. Apples and Bandaids was born. “We wanted to go back to basics,” says Clevenger. The name is a perfect symbol for the cause; apples for food, band-aids for medicine. The shirts for sale are simple in style, designed to get their message and mission out with big, bold, and brightly featured branding. The shirts’ simplicity belies the complexity of the issues they help support. Now in partnership with Los Angeles-based company Empowering Lives International, Apples and Bandaids donates half of their proceeds towards raising money for countries like Uganda, Kenya and the Congo. The company helps fuel an initiative that relocates families and villages in poverty to newly cultivated land, provides education and job training, and gives them a fresh start. The ultimate goal is a permanent solution for the people they are helping. “It’s not just a one time fix,” says Clevenger, “it’s really about giving them the potential to survive on their own, and that’s really key.”
Photo By Moss Media, Carmel
Apples and Bandaids doesn’t have plans to slow down any time soon. They are working to create a larger platform to impact, inspire, and initiate further change. Aside from reaching out to the local community on social networking sites, the company also sponsors local bands in return for promotional advertising. The shirts are available online, and in several 831-based boutiques. Urban Outfitters has also agreed to feature the trendy tees in upcoming months. Clevenger hopes that this will help the company reach a larger percentage of both the local and national population. He says, “I’m all about collaborating and dreaming big. I’m starting out small, and who knows what the future holds, but I’m dreaming big”
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Photo by moss media, Carmel
Danny I’s Grill 1200 Olmsted Road Monterey, CA 93940-5320 831.375.4100 www.DannyIGrill.com Lunch Tuesday - Friday 11:00 AM to 2:00 PM Dinner Tuesday - Sunday at 5:00 PM By Monterey Peninsula Airport on Hwy 68 and Olmstead Sept. Q ‘10 | 63
To driver Nick Galante, the clamor of engines is music, and the smell of rubber, perfume. Galante is one of those noisy, smelly, shiny blurs out on the track—and frankly, he’d prefer to be the one in front.
“I remember when I decided I wanted to race cars.” Galante pauses thoughtfully, taking time to choose the right words. “There was a moment when I was driving in Vermont, and there was this one banked turn. It had about a fifteen-degree bank, which is a lot for a regular street. I was driving in the evening and there was no one around, and I took the turn the way I thought it should be taken, went outside the yellow line.” He laughs, savoring the memory. “And it felt really, really good. To me, that was the moment I knew there was something special about motorsports.” Growing up in Massachusetts, Galante loved cars and driving, but never thought about making a career out of either. He made a liv-
Nick Galante Going Where My Heart Is
ing by working at a golf course, but after breaking his back in a snowboarding accident, he realized that he wasn’t living up to his own expectations. “It was a wake-up call for me,” Galante recalls. “I realized that life is precious.” Most people would call their loved ones more often, or maybe join a gym. Nick Galante packed his bags and moved across the country. “The peninsula had two things that I knew were close together: Pebble Beach golf course and Laguna Seca raceway. I knew I could get a job at Pebble, and then I could figure out how to get my foot in the door at Laguna Seca.” So Galante found a place in Salinas, put on a tie, marched into the Pebble Beach Pro Shop, and asked for a job. When he isn’t rac-
After work, while driving home down Highway 68, Galante would stop at Laguna Seca and talk with the drivers practicing there, even getting some rides around the track. Meanwhile, he was trying to figure out how he could break in himself. One day, a friend offered to let him drive a Shifterkart, a racing go-kart. Galante was skeptical. “I said ‘I want to race real cars, not fool around with kid’s stuff.’ But he let me try it out, and I bought one the next week.” Galante’s face lights up as he begins to describe driving 120 miles per hour while sitting four inches above the pavement. “They’re so fast, and so rewarding…a 125cc go-kart will beat any Ferrari or Lamborghini, you name it, around Laguna Seca. The center of gravity, the handling, the braking, acceleration, everything is faster than any road car.” Aged 25 at the time, Galante was significantly older than most of his competition, and had significantly less funding. Most of his competitors were in their teens, came from racing families, and had several years of sponsored experience. Galante struggled to find a place to even practice driving his kart. “There’s a track in Marina, but it’s like, sixty bucks a day. So I found a spot in Fort Ord and my friend and I set up some cones. The police would drive by and they’d stop and we’d go ‘oh, they’re going to bust us,’ but they were just watching us. They were just amazed at how fast we were going; they’d ask how fast, and we’d say thirty-five or forty miles an hour…but we were doing one hundred miles an hour in that parking lot.” Galante tried all kinds of schemes to raise money so that he could race more than twice a year, including sending out promotional DVDs that he produced himself. A full Shifterkart season requires about $100,000 of funding, and he raised about $800. “I wasn’t being taken seriously,” he recalls, “I needed to start racing Formula cars. The Jim Russell series up in Sonoma was offering a full season for a rookie who had never driven a Formula car who did well.” A Los Angeles-based company called Copy Solutions fronted the money for him to enter. He would be racing Contd... Page 77
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Photo by: Moss Media
The first thing you notice when you walk onto a race track is the smell; the sharp tang of burned rubber, the heady stink of highoctane gasoline burning through the headers of the shiny blurs on the track. The second is the sound; a basso rumble, intensifying into a wall of sound that assaults your entire body ears-first as the pack roars past, leaving Doppler-shifted echoes in their wake.
ing, he still works there.
Photo by: Moss Media
By Blaise Douros
You wouldn’t peg Galante for a racer if you passed him on the street. He lacks the essentials; a Southern accent, slick sunglasses, a white-and-red leather jacket covered in logos. There’s no ego, no bravado. When you get down to it, Galante has only two of the essentials for racing. The first is his passion for the sport. The second is that he’s fast. Really fast.
831-429-8070
Photo by: Moss Media
Photo by: Moss Media
1209 Pacific Ave Santa Cruz, CA 95060
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Reviews Real Raw Unedited
Most Reviewed Bakeries
Willie R. San Jose, CA. 3 Stars
layers 4.5 star rating based on 44 reviews 9 soledad Drive, Monterey, CA 93940 Vicky t. San Jose, CA. 5 Stars The buttercream was way too soft silky and airy to be butter cream... It was like I took a bite of little clouds of sugar and butter. The BFs mom used these guys for a retirement party and gave us some of the left overs.. I will take sloppy seconds from Layers ANY DAY OF THE WEEK.. DAY OR NIGHT... The raspberry filling was not overly sweet... the cake itself was just as light and airy as the butter cream Rednikki Q. Monterey, CA. 4 Stars I haven’t had the cake. I have had their croissants, which are the best I’ve had in Monterey, and the chocolate chip cookies, which are too sweet. If they served pain au chocolat, they’d see me every weekend. the Buttery 4 star rating based on 144 reviews 702 soquel Avenue, santa Cruz, CA 95062 Melissa T. Fremont, CA. 4 Stars I can’t believe I went to The Buttery and didn’t get any pastries. I’m ashamed of myself, only because I love baked goods. I actually went there for lunch with my bosses and I had the veggie lasagna and it came with a side salad. It was really tasty and I had extra to take home. I love the feel of the place too. Good cafe vibes going on. I need to go back and get a cake or something!
We have been fans of a great restaurant down the street and we’ve always noticed The Buttery. We finally took a chance after reading a few Yelp reviews while parked in front. So we had breakfast and the food was a little on the warm side. The hair found on the bottom of my brekfast dish (not mine - I am not a red head) ruined the best part of the meal. The manager was quick to give me a gift card. Service = 4 star, Pastry = 4 star, Food temp = 3 star, Potatoes = 2 star (need some Flavor), Spanish latte = 5 star
Hoffman’s 3.5 star rating based on 97 reviews 1102 Pacific Ave, santa Cruz, CA 95060 Ruthie G. Fremont, CA. 5 Stars We’re in Santa Cruz often and usually pass by Hoffman’s expecting it to be overpriced and mediocre... well one hungover day we missed the 2pm close for Zachary’s and decided to stop here. I was shocked that we spent less than $30 for our party of three and the food was GREAT... like better than great! This is my new favorite breakfast recovery spot.
Lindsey D. Aptos, CA. 5 Stars
AJ B. Hayward, CA. 4 Stars
After 2 weeks of new years dieting I went off the deep end and got a ham & cheese croissant from The Buttery. It was worth every calorie. I hadn’t been here since they added the cafe part on the side, and it seems they now have even more delicious options. Can’t wait to come back!
I only go here for the pastries. The raspberry filled short bread cookies are the greatest! They offer croissant sandwiches which are also delicious. I also enjoy the lemon bars, fruit tarts, and russian tea cookies. I must say they are a little pricey though.
Patisserie Boissiere 4 star rating based on 44 reviews Mission st & 7th, Carmel, CA 93921 Fiona T. San Jose, CA. 4 stars Loved this place!! Like other reviewers, I also experienced service that was a bit slower than what I’m used to, but come on, we’re in Carmel where it’s a quaint little town that seemed to be way more relaxed than I was, which was why I came here to begin with - to relax - so I honestly didn’t mind the slower service :) Food was awesome!! We had brunch on a Saturday, my friend got the Chicken Sandwich with brioche bread and ate every last crumb, and I got the Eggs Parisienne - poached eggs on a flaky croissant - I was in heaven. Really cute ambiance... With Carla Bruni playing in the background, I didn’t even feel like I was in America! I’ll definitely come back here again and again!.
Jen K. West Linn, OR. 3 Stars A meal that begins with complimentary house baked scones is off to a good start in my book. We were able to get seated right away on a weekend morning after passing a few other breakfast spots with long lines. Our main server was personable, but went MIA at a few points during our meal, so I was shocked at how quickly our food arrived once we placed our order. My Chilaquiles (scrambled eggs with tortilla strips, Jalapenos, peppers, etc.) was good and spicy, but I wish it came with a different side than black beans. Mr. K gave a thumbs up for his Two Eggs any style breakfast with bacon. We did have some minor service issues in addition to the MIA, where we got a bit of a not-myproblem/not-my-section kind of vibe. The décor is a little bland for fun and funky Santa Cruz, but it was a nice little restaurant.
These are raw and non-edited reviews by real people. They are taken from a fun website called yelp.com. We provide the info, and it’s up for readers to decide what they think. 831 just wants to support local businesses.
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Monthly Gym memberships with Spa and Pool amenities. Open 8am to 9pm daily. Free Parking Validation 201 Alvarado Street Monterey, California 93940 831.647.9000 www.spaontheplaza.com
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scene
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Inn at Del Monte Beach Rooftop
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831. 8 things
8
Ways to Cure Insomnia
Insomnia has many causes. But finding that one factor which triggers it most is often harder than the insomnia itself. You are, and always will be, your own best doctor when it comes to catching some shut-eye. Figure out the cause, cure it, and get some sleep. Below are eight tips to help get you started. Eight ideas to forget It’s all in your head. Breathe. The number one cause of insomnia is stress. If only you could leave all your worries behind as soon as your head hit the pillow. But you are not at the mercy of sleep. Sleep is trainable. You must quiet your mind. Anxiety, depression, and tension are the prime causes of insomnia. Try this—don’t think. One thought leads to another, and another, and before you know it, you’re in a full-fledged internal battle. Try controlled breathing. Inhale for four counts, hold for four counts, exhale for four counts, hold your breath out for four counts, and start the cycle over. Focus only on breathing. When questions come up, ask them nicely to go away and say, I am sleeping. I am sleeping. Seven Spoons of Lovin’: Bowl of Hot Oats. Don’t go cuckoo for Cocoa Puffs—reach for the oatmeal instead. You may try to self medicate by gobbling down a bowl of cereal in hopes of a little shut-eye. But the cereal choice matters. Some of you get nocturnal hypoglycemia. This means your blood sugar drops at night. When blood sugar drops, hormones (adrenaline, cortisol and growth hormones) release to regulate your glucose levels. Guess what those hormones do? They stimulate your brain and signal it is time to eat. Go for oatmeal or a whole grain cereal or a piece of toast because they maintain sugar levels and release serotonin, which promotes rest in the brain. You can also try pineapple juice. The bromelain in pineapple settles your stomach.
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Rewind
Sex. Really good sex. BY Adrea Peters Six Mixtures: Infuse yourself to sleep. . . Herbs! Oils! Tea! You can find heaps of goodies to help your insomnia. Do a little web research to discover your favorites. Bach Remedies has a nice product called Rescue Sleep. It is non-habit forming and addresses the kind of insomnia caused by stress. There are several essential oils to consider as well. Peace and Calming by YoungLiving rocks. Rub a little on the back of your neck before you go to sleep. Lavender can also be very effective, especially if you mix it with a little citrus oil or patchouli. As for tea, a popular pick is chamomile, but I say branch out to Tea for Sleep by Good Earth—it has valerian, and no chamomile. Five Spot: Just wear yourself out! Exercise during the day is key to resting at night. We’re built to move. Your uniquely designed legs and feet want to walk, run, jog. Exercise at least twenty minutes a day. But don’t forget to stretch after your workout and again before bed. Four, Count ‘em Four: Bedtime Monsters! It goes without saying that a healthy diet is key to a balanced life. Four types of foods prevent sleep: caffeine, sugar (this includes booze), protein, and dairy. Caffeine and sugar are no-brainers. They stimulate, not relax. Avoid. Protein takes a lot of work for your body to digest, which will keep your body awake. As for dairy—while cereal before bed with a modest portion of milk may help you to sleep, ice cream or cheese will not. Try this— eat half the amount of food you did yesterday and finish eating two or three hours before you knock off for the night. If you overeat, your body can’t digest it all unless it works all night to get it done. Three Blind Mice: Set the mood, man. . . This is a great cure. Make your room really dark, if possible no light at all. Think dungeon.
Remove the daily planner from your bedside. You should never, ever have a “To Do” list or Blackberry anywhere near your bedroom. The bedroom is for sleeping…or other things, which will eventually lead to sleep. It’s not for planning (and that includes your Kama Sutra checklist). Clean up all the clutter you have everywhere. Create a space for restfulness. You want to relax. Turn the illuminated clock to face the wall, not your eyes. Turn off all electronics. No TV, no music, no phones. Silence. Can you handle it? Two Pair of Aces: Forgive and Forget. All right, now we’re at the good stuff. The primary thing that keeps people awake at night is guilt. Worrying over something you said or did? Freaked out because he or she didn’t call? Panicked that you won’t get everything done on time? Tossing and turning over what was done to you? This is guilt. And it is bad for sleeping. You must let go of today. It’s over and done. Tomorrow will arrive and you are fully capable of handling all that it will offer you, but only if you’re well rested. Forgive yourself for whatever is troubling you. Set it free or forget about it. Then open yourself to the forgiveness of whomever or whatever has you troubled. You don’t ever have to ask anyone but yourself for forgiveness. All you have to do is be willing to be forgiven. The One: Sex. Really good sex. Nodding, aren’t you? Of course, this opens up the definition of really good sex—it’s best left to you to figure that out. Make it safe— emotionally and physically, please. First, it’s exercise, and hopefully a darn good workout. Translation—foreplay and stamina. Second, one of the best ways to climax is to let go of all your fear and anxiety, which will relieve your stress and help you sleep. Third, a veritable cocktail of natural chemicals is released including good chemicals for sleep, like serotonin, oxytocin and vasopressin. The latter two trigger melatonin, which is often prescribed for insomnia. Good luck and good rest.
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scene Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance ‘10 Photo By Reggie Regalado 831 Magazine
Copyright © 2010 by Kimball Studios/Courtesy of Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance.
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scene
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Nuts Going
BY MICHELE WINN
Sport nuts, lug nuts, donuts, she’s nuts, wing nuts, numb nuts, nutcase, health nuts, go nuts, kick in the nuts. We use the word “nuts” in everyday conversation. In the 831 we even live in the Land of Fruit and Nuts with about 231 acres of walnuts in Monterey County, 1905 acres in San Benito County and 40 acres in Santa Cruz County. But how many of us are getting our daily serving of nuts? So why is your daily serving of nuts the most important part of your day? Nuts are high in fiber, protein, vitamins, and minerals. They contain an abundance of energy with low levels of saturated fats and high levels of unsaturated fats. Not only are they a tasty snack or a great ingredient to add crunch and flavor to your meals, but they also can help lower blood cholesterol reducing the risk of heart disease. In fact, nuts can actually lower your risk of heart disease by 35%. Furthermore, some nuts like walnuts contain high levels of omega-3 fatty acids. According to the Food and Drug Administration, supportive research shows that eating 1.5 ounces of walnuts per day may reduce the risk of coronary heart disease. In addition to their nutritional benefits, nuts will also help to keep your waistline in check—even when it’s not swimsuit season. In the past, yo-yo dieters have given nuts a bad rap because of their fat content. However, they are actually a high protein, low
we got your nuts right here
carbohydrate food. Studies show that nuts, like almonds, help reduce the rise in blood sugar after eating. A cup of almonds contains more protein than an egg and also delivers calcium. Although nuts contain a high level of fat, they’re more filling and provide more sustenance than processed foods. If you are on the run and need some energy, steer clear of the junk food that puts on the pounds—grab a handful of nuts to keep you in shape. Be sensible and eat them by the ounce and not the pound, staying away from nuts covered in high amounts of salt, sugar, or chocolate. Walnuts and almonds should be high on your list of nuts to add to your diet due to their high concentration of omega-3 oils. Try also adding pistachios for iron, protein, fiber, and magnesium. A recent study from University of Illinois suggests that Brasil nuts may play a role in preventing breast cancer. Their high amounts of selenium, an antioxidant, neutralize harmful free radicals that can attack healthy cells. They also promote fertility. Another good source of antioxidants is the hazelnut, which contains high levels of vitamin E. If you’re counting carbohydrates, then the nut to avoid is the cashew. A one-ounce serving has 9 grams of carbohydrates and only one gram of fiber. The nut with the lowest net carbohydrates is the pecan, with only 1 net carbohydrate per ounce. While the peanut is actually a type of legume, it is always referred to as a nut. Peanuts and tree nuts are two of the most common allergies. It is not recommended for nursing mothers or children under 3 to eat peanuts. Peanuts are an excellent source of B vitamins, including folate, niacin, and riboflavin.
Keep walnuts, almonds, pecans, hazelnuts, peanuts, and pine nuts on hand at all times in your kitchen. They are a great addition to salads, vegetable side dishes, and pastas. Also, have a couple of jars of peanut and almond butter for spreading on warm toast with sliced bananas. This is an easy way to start your day on the right track and get those antioxidants and unsaturated fats in your system from the get go. If you eat cereal or oatmeal, you have it easy. Just throw a handful of walnuts or almonds in the bowl and voilà! Remember that nuts can go rancid due to the oils in them. Buy them in small amounts and keep them refrigerated if possible. If they smell bad, don’t eat them. This includes nut butters as well. Roasting nuts helps to remove the raw texture and flavor, making them more palatable and flavorful when cooking with them. First heat your oven to about 350F and place a handful of whole or chopped nuts on a cookie sheet or anything oven-safe. A word of caution—don’t forget about them. You will remember them as soon as you smell the unmistakable smell of burnt nuts. Check them after 5 minutes and give them a shake or stir. It should only take about 10 to 15 minutes to roast them to perfection- they will smell toasty and look slightly browned. Remove them from the pan and put them on anything cool so that the cooking process stops. So don’t forget to get your daily serving of nuts—you’ll live longer and look better doing it.
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by ryan lama
S p e a k e a s y
C i t y
In late August, droves of visitors from Santa Cruz to Big Sur descended upon a small pocket of sun that hugs the freeway just north of Monterey. Home to a mere 300 residents, Sand City's free three-day open studios weekend drew an audience of thousands to celebrate the city's 50th anniversary with art, street food, and music, including such acts as old-school legends “Los Lobos.” Could Sand City, known for its maverick ways and scrappy perseverance, become the Monterey Peninsula's next model community? After three decades of blight remediation, shrewd financial planning, visionary land-use policy, and game-changing infrastructure upgrades, the mini-metropolis is quickly becoming a force to be reckoned with. Banners boasting "City in Motion" invited shoppers to venture past their Costco-comfort-zone and check out the pulse of Sand City's makeshift downtown. Carrying the same name as Lon-
don's bobo fashion district, Sand City's 'West End' is decidedly less conspicuous than its British counterpart. No clothing boutiques or hipster hangouts are yet apparent, though the city is becoming a fertile ground for climbing gyms, hot rod repair shops, audio production facilities, and underground, invite-only dinner parties. The West End Celebration turned Sand City inside out. Families, local dignitaries, neo-hippies, and Facebook socialites alike gathered in mobs of sunkissed cheer. Would-be Burning Mangoers strolled through the crowd on eight-foot stilts, cooing animal sounds. Wine, beer, and coffee concoctions paired with taco truck offerings, kettlecorn, and Cuban cuisine. Wanderers were invited to choose their own adventure, through workshops that featured everything from kinetic sculpture to encaustic paintings. A former machine shop (now a vacant warehouse) was transformed into a screening room for CSUMB's Teen Film Festival and Fine Art Base's recent collaboration with Henry Miller Library. Overhead, residents watched a funk band get its groove on from their second-floor 'Sand City balcony' (an open roll-up delivery door with single waist-high pipe preventing partiers from plunging down a fifteen foot drop) Toto, we're not in Carmel anymore. The event was but a hint of the city's quirky character and gritty
charm. On a 'normal' day in Sand City, the streets are a bit more subdued, but the personalities no less colorful. Councilman Jerry Blackwelder stands Paul-Bunyan-tall, and can be found year-round in flip flops, a Panama hat, and mustachioed smile as he invents ways to resurrect the beloved watering hole that once graced the City's main intersection. Police Chief Michael Klein is more Robin Hood than Sherriff of Nottingham, more Swayze than Dirty Harry with a jovial wit and suave moves on the dance floor of official City functions. It's these everyday heroes who forego pretense in favor of the 'come as you are' attitude that allow all in Sand City to be comfortable in their own skin. Through their leadership, Sand City has been liberated from the cookie-cutter future that awaits most suburban neighborhoods. But it didn't come without hard work and sacrifice. While other municipalities were living it up, Sand City worked vigorously to eliminate severely blighted areas that once served as the county dump, and cultivate a long term income source that they a could rely upon during rainy days. Naysayers scoffed when the city committed roughly 20% of its buildable land to what are now the region's two most successful retail centers. Those same cities may someday stage a coup d'état to get their hands on Sand City's robust tax base. If they did, they'd soon find that Sand City has more police officers per capita than any city on the Peninsula, making it virtually crime free. The Contd... Page 79
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Galante, contd. from page 64 against younger drivers, some of whom had ten to fifteen fully sponsored seasons of Shifterkart or GT racing under their belts. The Jim Russell series was offering full, half, and quarter season scholarships to the top three rookies. Galante finished fourth. “I was bummed. Phil, my Copy Solutions sponsor, goes, ‘how’d you do?’ and I had to tell him I finished fourth. Then he says, ‘what’s it cost to run the whole season?’ And I said to myself, ‘oh my God, is this really happening?’ We pieced together a season—he said, ‘let’s run a few races, see how we do.’” In 2007, his first-ever year racing Formula cars, he placed tenth out of 87 racers, most of whom were more experienced and better funded. In 2008, the Jim Russell series doubled its fees and switched to newer, more powerful Formula 3 cars, and Galante despaired of finding enough funding to continue. But then the unthinkable happened—Galante won the scholarship shootout for 2008, winning a free season in a brand-new F3 car. In both 2008 and 2009, he won his age bracket, and placed second overall in the series. Galante’s work was far from over. Despite his scholarships, he still had to raise money to cover practice sessions and crash damage. And he had to do all of it while working 50 hours a week at Pebble Beach. Not to mention the time spent training in the gym. “The physical requirements that these cars ask of you are unbelievable.” Galante’s light demeanor turns serious. “The first time I drove the F3 I could barely turn the wheel, and my head was pinned down by all the wind on my helmet. These cars pull 3 Gs on eight-second turns.” But Galante’s passion was stronger than the G-forces, and thanks to his time in the gym, his body can take much more than it used to. Galante also spends time studying his opponents—knowing his enemy is key to his success. “The data review is phenomenal. The Jim Russell series provides
data analysis; they have sensors for everything from wheel speed to steering angle to throttle input to brake pressure, and you can compare it to the other drivers.” The sheer amount of information might paralyze some. Galante doesn’t get nervous though—just excited. “It’s a little tougher to fall asleep before a race, because I’m going over each turn, all the stuff I need to remember. I still get really excited the night before, because I get to go tomorrow where my heart is.” This year, the stakes have been raised. The Jim Russell series announced that in 2010, the overall winner of the series will receive a fully funded season, with the chance to race Indy cars. And nobody is more motivated to take that prize than the 32-year-old that everyone thought was too old to race Formula. “I’m doing all I can to see what my potential is. I’ve been in the gym, and hitting the phones, raising the money to make this happen. But I’ve come a long way and I’m feeling pretty good.” Even though he’s not racing at Laguna Seca, Galante credits his success completely to his move to the 831. “This was the best move I ever made. The connection of Pebble Beach to racing, being this close to Laguna Seca, with the Monterey Historics and the Concours D’elegance, and being able to caddy for drivers at Pebble and pick their brains was so invaluable. I just love this whole area.” By chance, a few hours after our interview, Galante pulls up next to me in his white truck at a stoplight. He grins broadly, and revs his engine. The light turns green, and his “yeeeeeha!” thunders across the street as he roars away. At thirty-five miles per hour, it’s probably the slowest start he’s ever had. But that doesn’t matter. The pavement’s where his heart is, whether he’s on the track or driving his home streets in the 831.
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y Bird poop
is white because Unlike mammals, birds don’t urinate, they excrete it in the form of uric acid., emerges as a white paste..
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FLEA, contd. from page 60 he won a contest, he would share it with the Westside and throw huge parties replete with the roulette of drugs and alcohol reserved for the likes of rockstars. Flea had it all: huge sponsorship dollars, endorsements, and endless amounts of industry and mainstream press. The darkness came creeping in. Flea would sit around bonfires tossing $100 bills just to watch people jump in and grovel. Having started experimenting with weed and alcohol at the age of 12, it was common for his binges to last for days, sometimes weeks on end. Stories of collecting driftwood for 24 hours, and his eventual fall from a 50-foot cliff in Davenport sparked the concern of his family and friends. Flea attempted to fight off accusations that he was using meth, acid, and coke, often while still feeling the effects of the very drug he was denouncing.
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78 | Sept. Q ‘10
“I was just bullshitting all my sponsors, my family and friends.” He adjusts himself in his chair. “When you are making crazy money every month and you are getting paid to be a surfer…well you can see what happens, right?” It was after his fall from the cliff that lead to the end of the road. Surfing was once his life, but now had become just another thing that the drugs had taken from him. Injured and strung out, he drove himself to a rehab facility. It wasn’t until after one of the numerous Narcotics Anonymous meetings that someone asked him “You done yet? I mean, are you finished destroying yourself?” Flea realized right then: yeah, he was done. Darryl “Flea” Virostko was at a crossroads. He realized he would have to undergo some major changes if he was going to get his life back on track. He quit hanging out with the people who had encouraged his drug habits. He got clean, and started surfing again. Then he decided he wanted to go one step further. Flea decided it was time to give others the second chance he had gotten. FleaHab is now up and running, with guidance from Providence Recovery Center. “People are lonely,” states Flea. “Sometimes people just need someone to hang out with.” He takes his clients surfing (his first choice, of course), skateboarding, and plays tennis and basketball; anything to promote an active lifestyle. He is applying for non-profit status for his new venture, hoping to get into the business of helping others help themselves. “You have to take care of things. I clean the house and mow the lawns and responsibilities are part of life. If you don’t have responsibilities then you are not living. You are basically just getting by. “ “I want to help the kids of Santa Cruz and beyond, and know that I can wake up and have an even-keel life while showing someone the right way.” No one is better qualified than the man who clawed his way back up from rock bottom. For more on Flea, watch the documentary The Westsiders, filmed by childhood friend Joshua Pomer, and costarring his friends Shawn “Barney” Barron and Jason “Ratboy” Collins. http://www.thewestsiders.com Visit http://www.fleahab.com for more information on Darryl “Flea” Virostko’s FleaHab program.
City, contd. from page 76 city self-funded a desalination plant, making it self-sufficient as other cities face a state-imposed water moratorium. Having tackled these basics, Sand City is now turning its attention to community amenities such as an art gallery at City Hall, public parking, and affordable housing that will be made available to (among others) artists who help accelerate the City renaissance. There is even talk of creating a performance venue to accommodate music year round. With three out of five Sand City Council members having roots in the visual arts, and the Arts Committee and Architectural Review Board being the only other official decision makers, it will come as no surprise that art and design are key to the city's identity. Since the late 80's, artists, musicians, and other kindred spirits have done as they wished in warehouses converted to 'live/work' artists' lofts. In 2004, Big Sur artist Greg Hawthorne commissioned modernist architect Jerry Lomax to elevate and refine that theme with a corrugated metal loft project that later earned a six-page spread in Architectural Digest. To further differentiate Sand City's vernacular from the usual faux-mission-style architecture of the Monterey Peninsula, Sand City envisions the majority of its housing element as clustered, mid-rise, mixeduse buildings that create a green, walkable community. A casualty of the housing bust of 2008, the building formerly known as the 'Design Center' is under new ownership, and will soon test Sand City's vision when it undergoes a multi-million dollar makeover this fall. With 'beach-chic' design theme and sustainable amenities, the project stands to increase Sand City's population by nearly 20%, with more than fifty condos that will be available for purchase beginning in spring of 2011. On the ground floor, contemporary art galleries, themed retail, and a hot-spot restaurant and bar will establish the building as the hub of Sand City's West End. On the horizon (literally) is Sand City's controversial plan to build a destination eco-resort due North of the large sand dune that is often tagged with proclamations of love. Orphaned from its two-miles of beach, Sand City forfeited rights to develop hundreds of parcels West of the freeway in return for the right to proceed with this and one smaller coastal project. Following the precedent of Post Ranch, the project is bunkered into the hill in a way that both saves energy and minimizes the visual impact to passersby. If built, the project could become the world's first hotel to receive Platinum rating for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design. We're just hoping that it includes a proper beach bar.
Chile, contd. from page 22 “We all felt so connected to the people,” says participant Essra Mostafavi. “We had spent time with the indigenous people, and then the earthquake hits. We knew all along we wanted to help, but when the earthquake hit, there was a sense of urgency.” News of the devastation and suffering rippled into an urgent desire to contribute. A fundraiser provided the outlet. Mostafavi immediately contacted Mavris, and their meeting spurred enthusiasm throughout the 831. People began to volunteer their time, services, money, and talents. Nick Yaqub, hotelier of the Inn at Del Monte, graciously donated his venue to host the event. Mostafavi designed the flyer, and students from the Monterey Institute of International Studies joined in the efforts to promote the cause. Lux 12 Management coordinated with volunteers. And upon hearing of the fundraiser, Osvaldo Vergera of local band Kombucheros immediately volunteered to provide music.
A note of gratitude to the evening’s sponsors: The Inn at Del Monte Beach and Dr. Nick Yaqub, Lounge 1110, Lux 12 Management, Kombucheros, DJ O.M., Eco Love Wines, Essra Mostafavi, Extensials Beauty Bar, Global Majority and Lejla Mavris, Lineage Imports, Moss Media Photography, The Mucky Duck, Nico Restaurant, OhZone, Otter Cove Wines, On The Beach Surf Shop, Oya Salon, Piatti’s, Schied Vineyards, SLB Women’s Clothing, Surf and Sand, Spa on the Plaza, Stacey Montoya, and Whole Foods. For more information on Global Majority please visit www.globalmajority.org.
“For me, this was more personal. I wanted to offer support,” Vergera, a Chilean native, explains. On March 11, 2010, the “Shaken Not Stirred” fundraiser utilized the generosity and compassion of the 831 community. With over 200 people in attendance, the event was a great success. “I was so proud of our 831 community for not only thinking of having a Chilean fundraiser, but taking it to the next level and actually putting it together so efficiently,” says Barbara Ingenhutt, a local attendee. “It was truly an amazing party full of phenomenal people, and a whole lot of fun!” The fundraiser was open to anyone concerned or effected by the traumatic event. Regardless of age, ethnicity, or income, each person found a way to show support for Chile. One young attendee decided to forgo her babysitting job and attend the event to contribute her $7 of savings. “It was really moving to see how much support there was,” Mavris says. In addition to individual contributions, local businesses donated gift certificates that were entered in a raffle. “If you have the opportunity to share your love, you should do it, without conditions,” Vergera says. The 831 community was able to support those in need, raising $4,000 at Global Majority’s fundraiser and donating it directly to the Chilean Earthquake cause. The donation provided food, supplies for rebuilding homes, and other necessary items such as sleeping bags.
Politics, contd. from page 38 disapprove of these Twittering habits, the constant flow of data has made it easier than ever for public figures to connect with their voters. Young voters no longer want icons; we want to feel that we have a genuine relationship with our representatives. With innovative ideas, some young locals are eager to shake up local politics, and Kevin Moon is leading the pack. The former pilot would know; during a final flight, Moon experienced a near-catastrophic engine failure. “In those times you learn how to be a leader very quickly,” he says. “You just have to learn to stow your fear, stick it somewhere and do your job. I think that’s the problem with a lot of politicians, they don’t stow it and they don’t do their job.” While some 20-and-30-somethings are content to be permanent visitors in their communities, it’s not enough for Burnett, Craig, McShane, Moon, and Showalter. They live in their communities. Their passion is fueled by the hope that their actions will inspire others to become involved. Until we make the conscious choice to carve out time from hectic schedules and workloads, the youthful voice in Monterey will always remain a discontented whimper. Gandhi suggested we be the change we wish to see. 831 asks you: what will your t-shirt read?
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SHOPPING, DINING & SERVICES DIRECTORY Official Magazine Pick-Up Locations A.G. Davi
Property Mgmt & Real Estate 831.373.2222 agdavi.com
Apples & Bandaids
Flanagan’s Irish Pub The Barnyard Carmel 831.625.5500
Footsie
applesandbandaids.com
The Barnyard Carmel 831.626.2080
Aqua Blue
Futons And Such
Spa Boutique 299 Main St, Salinas 831.123.4567
Ambrosia
Monterey / Aptos Indian Bistro 831.641.0610 ambrosiaib.com
Brittania Arms
Pub 444 Alvarado St, Monterey BrittaniaArmsofMonterey.com 831.656.9543
Monterey - Furniture 831.373.2443 futonsandsuch.com
Greg Dow’s Ultimate Fitness Center Pacific Grove 831.372.3656 gregdowsdojo.com
Idle Hands
805 Pacific Avenue Santa Cruz (831) 466-9305 banditbrand.com
Cannery Row Brewing Co. Inago
Mucky Duck
Sanctuary Beach Resort
Michael Angelo Gallery
Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk
Monterey - Pub/Night club 831.655-3031 muckyduckmonterey.com
Santa Cruz 831.426.5500 michaelangelogallery.net
Moss Media Photography 831.277.8987 mossfoto.com
Motiv
Santa Cruz Club / Restaurant / Lounge 831.427.2516
jandeluz.com
On The Beach Surf Shop
carmel-coffee.com 831.624.5935
CoastSide Couture
Wedding / Event Planning and Concierge Services 831.600.8206 coastsidecouture.com
Chic Wedding & Event Design 458 Lighthouse Ave, Monterey ChicEventDesign.com 831.375.1055
Crystal Arnold MakeUp Artist 831.915.5474
Drapoel
drapoel.com 831-636-5988
ESA
Security Company 877.HIRE -ESA theesa.us ELITE EVENT PHOTOGRAPHY eliteeventphotography.com 831.236 .1998
Exsentials
Monterey - Beauty Bar 831.643.1101
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Monterey Dinner house/Martini Bar 831.645.9036 lalla-palooza.com
Khaki’s of Carmel
Men’s Clothing Store 831.625.8106 khakisofcarmel.com
Keparé
2001 40th Ave at Clares Capitola 831.464.0262
Lalla Grill
Monterey American Grill 831.324.4632
La & Co
Monterey 831-646.9283 OnTheBeachSurfShop.com
Oya
Hair Salon 201 Lighthouse Ave Monterey 831.656.0570 OyaInc.com
Papa John’s Fremont Ave Monterey
Pacific Tweed
Carmel Clothing Boutique 831.625.9100 pacifictweed.com
Piatti
Carmel Italian Cuisine 831.625.1766 piatti.com
Retro Paradise
Modeling/Talent 831.621.3038 lcagency.com
retroparadiseclothing.com 1010 Pacific Ave Santa Cruz 831.460.9960
Liquid Surf Shop
Salon 506
Lincoln & Ocean Ave Carmel 831.624.7873
Main Event Limousines 831.646.5466 maineventlimousines.com
Oya Salon
Spa on the Plaza
Jan De Luz
Lallapalooza
Shimeko
So Fresh
Capitola Venetian Hotel
Carmel Valley Coffee
Wine Tasting Room, Monterey 831.455.9990 scheidvineyards.com
Old School Shoes
Carmel - Clothing Boutique 831.622.0313
Monterey - Boutique 831.333-1350
Scheid Vineyards
SLB Women’s Clothing
Salinas Auto Mall 831.444.8888 mycars.com
95 Prescott Avenue Monterey 831.643.(CRBC) 2722
Karma Fashion Lounge
400 Beach Street Santa Cruz, CA 831.423.5590 beachboardwalk.com
My Cars
Santa Cruz 831.423.2700 oldschool-shoes.com
1500 Wharf Road Capitola 831.476.6471 capitolavenetian.com
3295 Dunes Drive, Marina thesanctuarybeachresort.com 831.883.9478
Cannery Row 831.372.8000 slbclothing.com
911 Cedar Street Santa Cruz 831.600.8703 Monterey Gym & Full Service Spa With pool 831.647.9000 SpaOnThePlaza.com
Surf NSand
Carmel General Store 866.624.1805 carmelsfinest.com
Teezerz
731 San Benito Street Hollister 831-636-5988
The Beadsmyth
thebeadsmyth.Etsy.com
The Cosmo Factory Santa Cruz Cosmetology School 831.621.6161 thecosmofactory.com
The Inn at Del Monte Beach Small Luxury Inn Monterey 831.655-0515 innatdmb.com
The Krate
506 Polk St. Monterey 831.372.0506
Men’s Street Wear boutique 831.466.3865 thekrate.com
Sam Linder Auto Group
Vincent Valet
1711 Del Monte Blvd. Seaside 831.899.8800 SamLinder.com
1172 S. Main Street # 137 Salinas 1.888.78.valet
Noel Jean, contd. from page 55 industry, they have some knowledge to give to you,” Jean says. “As a young person starting out, you really have to take those bits and pieces and use them to your advantage. It’s priceless knowledge.” But it’s not always like The Devil Wears Prada, as each season presents Jean with new obstacles. “Fashion and styles are constantly changing. And in the beginning you are basically doing everything on your own,” Jean says. Jean’s future aspirations are simple. She hopes to inspire her peers through her story, and urges people to always follow their dreams, no matter where they might take you. “I think that everyone has those doubts coming from a small town, but I say try,” Jean says. “You just have to try and put yourself out there. Try with integrity and just go for it.” What 831 loves about NoelJean is its bold, bright, fresh, fun, and versatile appeal. You can follow Jean on her blog, “Behind the Seams with Noel Jean” at www.BTSWnoeljean.blogspot.com, or on her website, noeljean. com. Jean also plans to bring a traveling trunk show through the 831 area to strut her styles in her hometown. Stay tuned to 831mag’s blog to catch event information about Noel’s show, as well as many other artists, designers, and events in the 831 area.
Tapia, contd. from page 19 How did you train for the marathon? I’ve always been better in longer distances. I was never much of a speedster; the longer the race, the better. Coach Zepeda mapped out my training regimen. One of the things I did differently was work on my strength. The way the course is laid out is really hilly. So I went out back of Laguna Seca and did a lot of hilly runs, at least two or three times a week. Everybody hates hills, and I hate them even more. But I just worked really hard on building a lot of strength. As far as mileage, I went from 85 to 90 miles a week to more than 100, consistently, for more than a month and a half. My workouts got longer and more intense. Despite my determination, it was tough to stay motivated. What would you do differently if you had it to do over? I plan to do it over and over again, in other races. It was an amazing feeling to experience crossing that finish line first, and I want to have it again. So, I need to learn from this first marathon. Next time, which will be in Houston in January, I will maybe go out a little bit slower. And my biggest mistake in Big Sur was not taking in any water until mile 13 at Bixby Bridge. Next time, I will take Goo, the electrolyte replacement. I have taken it since Big Sur and it has helped a lot during my practice runs. And I will stretch more. In Houston, I’m hoping to hit a 2:13 finish. Where are your sights set after Houston? I will return to the same place one year later, to participate in the 2012 Olympic Trials. And, a few months later, I will graduate from law school and go into criminal law. I hope to stay in this area; unfortunately, there is crime everywhere, so there’s always going to be a job out there. Besides, the scenery and the weather make this is a very nice place to run.
Orosco, contd. from page 39 practitioners. When I started, I never had anyone telling me what to do or how the different vaults worked. I had to sort it all out for myself. These days, there is such a massive wealth of knowledge that can be easily accessed that new people are learning infinity faster I did. I can teach an entire class of people in one hour what took me six months to learn on my own. Plus, teaching has helped polish my own skill. Having to break down movements to their bare bones so they can be easily explained to students forced me to think about my craft in an entirely different way. So now when I train, I act as my own teacher and am constantly critiquing my own execution in the never-ending pursuit of perfection. Tell us about Ninja Warrior. Ninja Warrior has been a very important part of my success and the growth of my notoriety among the general public. Most people in the freerunning world have at least heard of Brian Orosco or NoSole, but Ninja Warrior gave me a name apart from my freerunning counterparts. I’ve been to Japan four times and just completed the American Ninja Warrior boot camp this last week, which was the final round of G4tv’s competition in the United States to select 10 athletes to return to Japan to take on Mt. Midoriyama during Sasuke 26, a Japanese sports entertainment television special where 100 competitors attempt to complete a four-stage obstacle course of increasing difficulty. My last trip to Japan in February for Sasuke 25 was my most successful, as I was the only American to make it to Stage 3, and one of only five out of the original 100 competitors to advance that far in the competition. How has participation in parkour affected your perspective? Once you start training, jumping off walls, climbing over things, and catching air, you start to see the world in a whole different way; it all becomes a huge playground. Now, I view the world in movements rather than actual shapes. There is a very strong philosophical side to training, involving self discipline and a kind of suspension of self. This is one of reasons it’s so attractive to young people. The target entry-level athlete is middle or high school because that age is fearless. Ever since I found parkour and made it my primary source of income, the obsession with the movement itself is enough to make me want to keep it part of my life until I can’t possibly do it anymore. Making it my career is rounding out my life. Other than family and friends, it consumes 100 percent of my time, whether I’m training or making videos or negotiating deals. It’s an obsession. I feel about parkour the way you do when you fall in love with someone. I think about it all the time; it’s always in my head, I’m excited about it. If I don’t go outside and do some sort of training, I get antsy and feel like I want to explode. I will do this till the day I die, till my body can’t take it. Even then, I’ll find a way to be involved. It’s part of me for life. For more information or for a virtual experience of Orosco on the move, visit www.tempestfreerunning.com or YouTube, which he credits for the explosion in popularity of parkour as well as his own success. Orosco’s channel is youtube.com/NoSolePK. To contact him, check out facebook.com/NoSole or email him at NoSole@ TempestFreerunning.com
Sept. Q ‘10 | 81
Zen Sit Down, Be Quiet, y respira
by María Joaquina Villaseñor
“Meditation is old and honorable, so why should I/not sit, every morning of my life, on the hillside,/looking into the shining world?...” —Mary Oliver, “What I Have Learned So Far” Tomorrow is Sunday and at 8:30 in the morning, I will begin a half-day of sitting zazen, the meditation practice of Zen. This means that for four hours I will be sitting cross-legged, back straight, the scent of incense wafting around me, facing a blank wall, my hands positioned in my lap in a mudra shape. Four hours of sitting still, being quiet, breathing, noticing my mind’s chatter, willing it to slow down, watching—in my mind’s eye—as thoughts enter and exit. My right foot will most likely fall asleep, my back and shoulders will fatigue, and I will realize that I am more exhausted than I thought as I fight off sleep. My mind will become tired from the effort of bringing my attention back to my breath and away from thoughts about what work I should be doing, what I should have for lunch, whose call I forgot to return, what I would like to wear to our university’s Commencement ceremony, and so on. It is startling the number of inane—and sometimes scary—thoughts that are lurking in our minds once we stop to notice. So, given the challenges—for the body and the mind—why sit zazen? In his book, Not Always So: Practicing the True Spirit of Zen, Shunryu Suzuki writes, “The reason we practice zazen is to be the boss of everything…Wherever we are…You are letting yourself be with everything and letting things be as they want to be…You are just managing things in some way, as your own.” By being “the boss of everything,” Suzuki refers
82 | Sept. Q ‘10
to the goal of not letting our aversions, our desires, and/or our fears control us. Rather, being “the boss of everything” means that you accept your life as it is. Like most Zen teachings, this sounds simple enough, but the tremendous difficulty of achieving this quickly becomes apparent when we pay attention to our every day lives, or while sitting zazen. In the first half-day sitting in which I participated, I recall thinking—towards the end of it—“There is absolutely no way that I’m the boss of everything. In fact, I can’t be the boss of anything because I’m CRAZY!” Yes, once one slows down and pays attention to the whirlwind of thoughts in one’s mind, it is not uncommon to find what feels like sheer insanity…and discomfort. One of the main tenets of Buddhism is that most of us live in a nearly constant state of discomfort. Indeed, the first of Buddhist’s Four Noble Truths is that there is suffering—discomfort in the extreme. Buddhism teaches that we all have suffering in our lives and that the cause of suffering is attachment. Of our many attachments, an important one is the attachment that most of us have to the idea that things should be different than they are. But don’t take my word for it. Buddhism also teaches that we shouldn’t believe its teachings without our own investigation—it encourages us to check the ideas out for ourselves. Our attachment to wanting things to be different than they are is a really easy one to check out. I desperately
wanted this article to write itself (suffering ensued). I want my students’ papers to grade themselves (suffering). I want my dog to clean up its own poop (suffering). I don’t want to have a sink full of dirty dishes….or as many meetings as I do (suffering). I want to fit into the pants I fit into three years ago, and I want to fit an externally imposed idea of what it means to look good in a swimsuit. Suffering and more suffering. You will no doubt be able to easily generate your own list of things you wish were different about your life. But the third noble truth is that there is a way out of all this suffering. There is a way to become the boss of everything in the sense of accepting yourself and your life as it is. That way out is referred to as the eightfold path, which is a kind of guide for living in a way that could lead to the cessation of suffering and, ultimately, self-awakening. Although the eightfold path is too complex to outline here, one of the core ideas is that right mindfulness is key. Sitting zazen is an important practice that can cultivate this right mindfulness, helping us to pay attention to our thoughts, to our lives, and ultimately to feel more peaceful and yes, happy. And if this sounds crazy, check it out for yourself. Sit down, be quiet, and breathe. After sitting, you will still have dirty dishes to wash, papers to grade, and poop to clean up, but maybe, just maybe—you’ll be one step closer to feeling OK about it. k
Get your pinky up!
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Sept. Q ‘10 | 83
Land Rover Monterey
1711 Del Monte Blvd Seaside, CA 93955 Phone: (831) 899-8800 Fax: (831) 899-8828 www.samlinder.com
SAM LINDER
AUTO GROUP